Private John Henry Wilcock Rhodes ( ). Postscript.

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Transcription:

Private John Henry Wilcock Rhodes (1881 1915). 22 nd Battalion Australian Imperial Force. Postscript. 2 nd Lieutenant Charles John Girling. Hampshire Regiment. J H W Rhodes was at Batley Grammar School in the 1890 s. At the age of 18 he emigrated to Australia, where he had various jobs as a clerk in Melbourne and a farm hand in Carag Carag, near Bendigo, a mining town in Victoria. When he joined the Australian Imperial Forces in 1915 he signed his attestation forms and showed that his last address prior to enlisting was in Lewisham Park, London. Lewisham Park was at that time the home of Alice Mary Blue, who had moved from Bradford after her marriage to a surgeon, Charles Blue, who himself came from New South Wales. Alice Mary (Blue) and Birtha Louise (Girling) were both sisters of J H W Rhodes and both married doctors. Whilst Alice Mary was living with a doctor in London, her sister Birtha Louisa was already married to a surgeon, Charles Girling, and was living in Birstall in 1901. The Girlings were married in 1896 in Yorkshire. Their son Charles John was born in Birstall on May 29 th 1897. John Rhodes was the uncle to Charles John Girling, or Jack as he was best known. In 1911 Charles John Girling was a student at Wellington College and was shown on the census as residing there. The family seem to have moved to Dorset to be near the young Charles. Charles senior became a public vaccination doctor in Wimborne. Between 1915 and 1917 Alice Blue (Rhodes) lost her brother JHW Rhodes in war and her sister Birtha as well as her husband Charles. In 1915 Alice ( Rhodes) Blue s husband Charles died in Catford, South London. In 1917 Alice s sister Birtha (Girling), died. In 1916 she was to hear of the death in action of her nephew Charles John Girling, formerly a pupil at Wellington College. By 1915 Jack Girling had joined the Hampshire Regiment as a 2 nd Lieutenant. He died on the Somme in October 1916. He is featured in De Ruvigny s Roll of Honour, though it is not known why as he received no special medals. During his short service at the front Charles Girling managed to write a short poetry anthology entitled Ballads of Wellington and the War. The book was printed in 1917, but is currently unavailable. In 2011 a party from Wellington School visited the graves of their war dead and read a poem by Jack Girling, one of Wellington s old boys. Jack was probably given the nickname to distinguish him from his father of the same name.

His Poem School Colours reveal his love for his old school, which ironically could have been Batley Grammar School, had his father not sent him away to Wellington, and the family had stayed in the Birstall area. School Colours Though Far away I have to roam Amidst the pleasant fields of France I can, but by a single glance Recall dear memories of home It hangs before me on a nail This talisman of wondrous charm Whereby I flee from War s alarm And once again to England sail O wondrous piece of coloured rag Which in each torn discoloured fold More power hast than finest gold To soothe the thoughts which often nag For when I gaze on you above I see dear Wellington again And in the mud and drifting rain In fancy play the game I love Again I see familiar sights Once more I hear each goodly sound My heart leaps back with one great bound And finds an orgy of delights

And though I wander far and wide I keep this treasure ever near The treasures of my school so dear Are never parted from my side. Charles John (Jack) Girling is featured in Lynn MacDonald s book about the Voluntary Aid Detachment nurses of the First World War, entitled, The Roses of No Man s Land. She tells the story of Gladys Stanford in the pages of her book and how Gladys was injured and had to attend the surgery of her local doctor, one Charles Girling, in Cranborne, Dorset. MacDonald writes: The family doctor, Charles Girling, was called in to lance her swollen hand. He looked worn and anxious because his son Jack had reached his nineteenth birthday just in time to be sent to France where men were badly needed to bring the army up to strength after its losses on the Somme. Jack Girling himself regarded this as a tremendous stroke of luck. He had been almost seventeen when the war began and had spent the past eighteen months worrying that it would all be over before he would be able to get into the fight himself. At Wellington College, a school with a long military tradition, they took the war seriously J H W Rhodes nephew was reputedly a brilliant all rounder and had won an entrance scholarship to Wellington in 1910. He picked up prizes at Wellington for Literature, Chemistry and Mathematics and was a great sportsman by all accounts. He became a Lieutenant in the school OTC, which was to be a route into the army as a commissioned officer for him. In 1915 he won an open scholarship in Mathematics to Corpus Christi College Oxford. However, he had also applied to join the army and his wish was granted when he was appointed to the Special Reserve of the 3 rd Battalion of the Hampshire Regiment. After the Battle of the Somme in July 1916 Jack Girling s name was put forward to be in a draft of men to join the 1 st Battalion of the Hampshires so as to be sent to reinforce them in France. He went to France, landing from the boat the Viper, at Le Havre. Whilst on the Viper he penned another poem, At last has come the time for which we always used to pine We re all aboard the Viper and we lounge and smoke and dine And watch the wheeling seagulls and the distant shores of France And the sunlight on the water and the waves that gaily dance

And soon we ll heave the anchor up and then we ll move away And potter up the river on this super glorious day And when we get to Rouen, sure, we ll have a genial spree For we do not care a buffer now we ve wandered o er the sea For everyone is happy now as happy as can be We ve had as good a crossing as you d ever hope to see We lie about and smoke and read and wallow in the sun For now at last we re off to strafe the Godforsaken Hun For we re all off together We re making for the war We don t need to worry Or grumble any more. Jack Girling written on board The Viper Summer 1916. The Hampshires were certainly in need of the reinforcements brought by the Viper. On July 1 st 1916 all twenty six of their officers had become casualties and they had lost a total of 559 men. By August 1916 the Hampshires had travelled north to Ypres and the young replacement officers, Girling amongst them, were billeted in the officers mess at Elverdinghe Chateau. On the first day of Michaelmas Term, which would have been Girling s first day at Oxford had he not joined the colours, his Battalion went into bivouacs at Montauban. On October 22 nd 1916 the Hampshires were given the task of leading the attack on German trenches, under cover of a creeping barrage. However, the German machine gunners had taken to the ridges behind the trenches and fired into the smoke created by the barrage. On October 23 rd 1916, whilst leading his men from the trenches Jack Girling was hit, either by shell fire or machine gun bullet. His body was never recovered and he is commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial. He was nineteen years old and had been in France just less than three months. Jack Girling was one of several hundred Hampshire Regiment casualties on that day and it was not long before his father, Charles Girling recieved the following telegram from the War office: To Doctor C. Girling, Wimborne, Dorset. Regret Inform You Second Lieutenant C. J. Girling 1 st Hampshire Regiment Missing Presumed Killed. Ironically it was a Yorkshire Regiment that relived the remnants of the Hampshires in the line in early November 1916. The 2 nd Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment took their place. They found corpses lying in the trenches, still unburied from the weeks before. Although burial

parties were sent out many of the bodies had to be left due to the constant bombardment the recovery parties faced and many of the bodies were blown even more to oblivion and seeped into the mud in no man s land, never to be recovered. The Commonwealth War Grave record for Charles Jack Girling reads: 23rd October 1916. Age 19. Son of Charles John Girling of "Chaseborough Verwood, Wimborne, Dorset, and the late Bertha Louisa Girling. Pier and Face 7 C and 7 B Thiepval Memorial. Some twenty five years later an In Memorium in a 1940 s newspaper commemorates his death in 1916 and also mentions the death of his mother Bertha ( Rhodes ) in 1917. Alice Mary Blue, (Rhodes), who had seen so many of her family die in just two short years, died in Bournemouth in 1923, leaving part of her estate to her brother in law Charles Girling. Jack Girling was not a Batley Lad but he would probably have been one if he had stayed in his native Birstall, Yorkshire, where he was born and spent his early life. His connection to John Henry Wilcock Rhodes is an interesting one and deserves mention in this book of remembrances of Batley Grammar School boys.